đ€Ź Canât spell traffic without two f-bombs - The Hustle
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Royal gossip isnât our thing, but maybe it should be? King Charles didnât know about the existence of plastic wrap until recently and allegedly âshriekedâ when he first saw it covering food. Meanwhile, 9-year-old heir Prince George is apparently big into AC/DC and Led Zeppelin. Fun crew, those royals.
In todayâs email:
Most trusted brands: For people born before 1997, anyway
South Korea bet $40m that the way to the worldâs heart is through its stomach
Commutersâ rail: The worst part of office work is getting there
Around the Web: The history of red velvet cake, an online stamp exhibit, Gothamâs cat, and more internet finds
The Big Idea
Who do you trust? Band-Aid, apparently
Baby boomers and Gen Xers are nearly 2x as likely to trust brands than Gen Zers.
2023-05-24T00:00:00Z
Ben Berkley
Itâs time to retire that old âRip the Band-Aid offâ idiom. Seems nobody is in a huge rush to get rid of their Band-Aids.
The first-aid aider topped decision intelligence company Morning Consultâs annual Most Trusted Brands report.
The Johnson & Johnson-owned bandage brand stuck it to all other US brands for a second straight year, besting other top-five finishers UPS, Amazon, Lysol, and Kleenex.
Band-Aid wasnât a hit with everyoneâŠ
⊠The exception being Gen Z; they donât trust a damn thing.
The survey calculated net trust ratings â the share of people who say they trust brands âto do the right thingâ minus the share who donât â for 1.5k+ popular companies.
On average, Gen X and baby boomers were the most trusting (~22%), with millennials slightly less trusting (~19%). Those low numbers wouldâve been wounding enough.
Then Gen Z lifted those Band-Aids right off and poured salt right on: Their net trust rating was ~11%.
Are the kids alright?
A generous view here suggests theyâre new consumers who havenât had time to build trust with companies yet.
But weâll take a colder, more realistic track: This is a generation that distrusts, well, nearly everything â from higher education to state and local governments. They barely even trust doctors.
Nonprofits were the only category of brands Gen Z responded well to. This checks out; they also volunteer at the highest rates of any generation.
Translation: Institutions of all kinds, including corporate America, have a lot of trust-building work ahead if they want to unlock Gen Zâs spending power.
BTW: Who else has customersâ faith? (At least among older Americans.) Rounding out the top 10: Cheerios, Visa, Dove, The Weather Channel, and FedEx.
TRENDING
A TikToker went viral for rehabbing a bright blue couch she found on the curb, with some praising her thrifty ways and others worried about bedbugs. Entomologist Jim Fredericks weighed in, telling NPR they can lie dormant, sans food, for six months. Great, thanks.
SNIPPETS
TodAI in AI: Google-backed generative AI startup Anthropic raised $450m, bringing total funding to ~$1.45B. Anthropic is behind only OpenAI in the AI capital-raising race â but by a mile: OpenAI has raised $11.3B+ to date.
Buy high, sell low: Months after UK antitrust authorities ordered Meta to sell Giphy, which was acquired for ~$315m in 2020 and has 1.7B daily users, Shutterstock is buying the company for $53m.
Wait, itâs not good for us?! US Surgeon General Vivek H. Murthy issued a wide-ranging advisory on the risks of social media use to youth mental health. If youâre interested in reading the dense 19-page report, here you go.
What is even real anymore? Adobeâs Generative Fill AI feature, coming to Photoshop later this year, lets you extend images and insert objects using text. Should come in handy for, well, basically anyone.
Flipboard is integrating Bluesky, allowing users to browse their feeds in the app. Flipboard has also integrated Mastodon, and is set to add decentralized Instagram alternative Pixelfed, too.
Itâs on: TikTok is suing Montana over its ban on the app, saying it violates the First Amendment. Five Montana TikTok creators are also suing the state for the same reason.
Look ma, no driver: Alphabetâs Waymo and Uber have teamed up. Later this year, Uber users in Phoenix will be able to order rides and delivery via Waymoâs self-driving cars.
Dysonannounced several new products including a redesigned robot vacuum with an arm that helps clean room edges. Itâll probably cost you, though â the previous model was $1k.
Stay agile: Your leadership style can have a huge impact on your team and business. Looking to be flexible and adaptable? Try agile leadership.
Seoul Food
Zachary Crockett
The $40m bet that made South Korea a food and cultural power
If youâve eaten Korean food, you know itâs delicious.
Whether youâve flipped sizzling beef over a Korean barbecue, crunched down on a tangy piece of kimchi, or basked in the warm steam wafting off a bibimbap bowl, the experience is captivating.
What you might not know, though, is that your meal likely came with a heaping side of government funds.
In 2009, the South Korean government launched the $40m Korean Cuisine to the World campaign with the goal of improving South Koreaâs global reputation through its food.
In the years to come, the government would spend millions of dollars opening Korean restaurants abroad, developing and standardizing recipes, and working to make South Korea a culinary destination for international tourists.
But can food really help elevate a countryâs reputation? And how much further can South Korea push its food campaigns?
If pitching in an oversaturated niche, you better have damn good reasons.
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The right words are out there â you just have to find them.
Working in the office isnât the problem. Everything surrounding in-office work is.
2023-05-24T00:00:00Z
Juliet Bennett Ryla
The WFH vs. return-to-office debate has been raging for months now with little give from either side. Yet it may not be the office remote workers dread, but everything else. Namely:
Spending money
Getting there
It adds up
Employees say theyâre spending up to $45 more per day they go into the office, perInsider. Consider:
Office clothes: Refreshing a business-casual wardrobe costs more than wearing your favorite sweats all day.
Coffee and lunch: You can prep ahead â supposing you have time or donât feel pressured to join co-workers for meals, coffee, or happy hours.
Child care, which can eat up 8%-19.3% of a familyâs median income per child, per the US Department of Labor.
Commuting: Gas, car maintenance, public transit fare, etc.
Speaking of commutingâŠ
⊠Itâs a serious gripe. Most workers donât get paid for their commute and it can be pretty stressful.
In an op-ed for The New York Times, Farhad Manjoo noted that numerous surveys have found commuting to be the biggest return-to-office pain point.
Americans yet to return to their daily commutes are saving 60m hours per day collectively, which they spend on fulfilling tasks while experiencing record-high job satisfaction.
Thatâs also fewer cars on the road â a positive for traffic and the environment.
Bottom line: We may need to rethink the way offices are set up if bosses want people back in them. Of course, that would take an overhaul of some pretty big systems and infrastructure â roads, public transit, child care â  so, uh⊠good luck, bosses.
AROUND THE WEB
⟠On this day: In 1935, MLB held its first night game, made possible by new lights installed at Cincinnatiâs Crosley Field. The Cincinnati Reds saw paid attendance bump 117% that season.
đ Thatâs cool: The National Postal Museumâs new online exhibit, âStamps Across the Pacific: A Visual History of Asian American, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander Migrations,â includes every related USPS stamp issued to date.
đ§ Promo: On this episode of Side Hustle Pro, learn how to start inviting people to your email list and more.
đ Thatâs interesting: Red velvet cake has changed a lot over time. For one, it hasnât always been red.
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